As East Cobb man nears 100th birthday, ‘I never worry about tomorrow’

East Cobb man turns 100

Ever since Harry Kone survived wounds at Guadalcanal that reduced him to one working lung, he’s chalked up his long life to a simple philosophy:

“I never worry about tomorrow.”

It’s a mindset that served him well in 40 years as a public school teacher in Chicago, in raising three children and in staying involved with veterans groups and his church since his retirement.

In 1995, Kone and his late wife Marjorie moved to a senior-living community in East Cobb, off Johnson Ferry Road, to be closer to two of their children.

These days, one of those children, his daughter Sue Lind, is his in-home caregiver, and in recent weeks she’s been busy preparing for a very different birthday celebration for him.

It’s not just that Kone will turn 100 years old on Aug. 16. In the time of COVID-19, he’ll finally be able to see family members he hasn’t seen since the outbreak in March.

But they’ll be doing it incrementally, one family at a time.

“Everybody’s coming on a different day,” Sue explains about the need to keep gatherings small, and she notes, less hectic.

Kone’s friends from the Squire “Skip” Wells Marine Corps League also will be wishing him a happy birthday, via conference call.

Kone accepts the reality of the health restrictions.

“I feel great,” he says.

He’s met with some of his Marine League buddies in his garage, all of them sitting socially distanced.

“His social life has been more robust than mine,” says Sue, a human resources consultant who sold her home in Buckhead four years ago to look after her father. “His life is here.”

Kone also has been active at the Unity North Atlanta Church on Sandy Plains Road, where the minister is planning a special video message for his birthday.

His resilience was shaped by his younger years. The only child of a Baltimore railway clerk and a homemaker, Kone was an avid reader, the habit instilled by his mother.

In 1939, he had moved to Milwaukee to work as a welder, and attended a branch of the University of Wisconsin on scholarship to help develop children’s programming in the very early days of televison.

He was living in a boarding house there when he met the young woman to whom he would be married for 65 years.

After Pearl Harbor, Kone volunteered for the U.S. Marine Corps, and served as a machine gunner in the South Pacific.

It was at Guadalcanal that he recalls a conversation he and some of his fellow Marines had, during a lull in the combat.

“We were talking about what we were going to do when we got back home,” Kone said.

Not long after that, the Japanese began a bombardment attack, and many of those young men never made it home.

Harry Kone, East Cobb World War II veteran
Harry Kone cuts his 99th birthday cake in 2019 with friends from the Marine Corps League.

“You never know what’s going to happen the next day,” he said, explaining how he wanted to return to service after getting wounded in that engagement.

As it turned out, his injuries were too severe, and he was honorably discharged in 1945. A bout with tuberculosis kept him in a Veterans Administration hospital for two years.

But Kone persisted with his aim of becoming a teacher, and earned undergraduate and graduate degrees from Northwestern University. He and Marjorie raised their family on the west side of Chicago, and lived there for 50 years. Kone later taught at the college level and made appearances as a public speaker.

After moving to East Cobb, Kone hooked up with the local Marine Corps League, which has met at the veteran-owned Semper Fi Bar & Grill in Woodstock. Marjorie Kone died nine years ago, at the age of 90.

Last year, for his 99th birthday, he was honored by the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

“He always used to say that every day was a holiday,” Sue says.

Kone also stays engaged with books. Sue says he’s always reading something related to current affairs. On a coffee table in his living room is his current book, “So You Want To Talk About Race?” by Ijeoma Oluo.

Kone has some big plans for the near future. His grandson, who lives in London, is getting married to a British woman next summer, and he wants to make the trip for the wedding at St. Paul’s Cathedral.

Kone says he understands the anxiety many people are facing today, given the circumstances, and harkens back to memories of what he endured during World War II.

“From then on, I never worried about much. I had plans, but I didn’t worry about what I’m going to do tomorrow,” he said.

“This is what worries a lot of people,” Kone said, but “if I’m dead tomorrow, I don’t have to worry.”

He lets out a bit of a laugh and a big smile, and then offers up what he claims is the real secret to a good, long life.

“The three ‘S’s,” he said. “[Get] lots of sleep. [Do] lots of stuff. [Have] lots of sex.

“If you have that, you’ll live to be 100.”

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Pope graduate earns bachelor’s degree from KSU in three years

Pope High School graduate Angie Jackson

Submitted information about a Pope High School graduate who recently earned a bachelor’s degree from Kennesaw State University with honors, and in only three years, and will soon be seeking a master’s in accounting:

Angie Jackson gained the foothold she wanted at Kennesaw State by keeping busy and taking advantage of opportunities during her undergraduate experience – and she did it with intense determination.

Jackson, an Honors student who officially graduates this week, earned a position as a trumpeter with the Marching Owls, studied abroad in Italy, joined two professional fraternities, and completed two internships – all while earning a bachelor’s degree in accounting in just three years.

A Zell Miller Scholarship recipient, Jackson was a trumpeter with her high school band. She said that her interest in attending Kennesaw State began when she was exposed to the University’s Marching Owls.

“Our school was undergoing construction, and KSU let us practice at their indoor band facility during our summer band camp,” said Jackson who graduated from Pope High School in Cobb County, Georgia. “When I saw the University and the Marching Owls, I knew that this was the place I wanted to be.”

While Jackson was focused on getting her degree, she also knew that she wanted to be active in campus life. She immediately auditioned for and earned a spot with the Marching Owls, and was section leader for two of her three years with the band. Her love of music also drew her to Sigma Alpha Iota, a professional women’s music fraternity, where she served as the philanthropy chair.

Zeroing in on the right major took her a little longer.

“I’m one of those people who loves all subjects, because I love to learn,” Jackson said. “While I knew I wanted to do something in business, I also knew I wanted something specific to focus on and that eventually led me to accounting.”

As an accounting major, the determined Jackson put her energy into networking opportunities. She became a member of the honors organization for accounting, finance and information systems majors, Beta Alpha Psi.  She also attended KSU Career Fairs where she quickly secured her first internship in the accounting department of WarnerMedia as one of 12 interns.

“I got a lot of great experience there learning about invoicing and vendor relationships. I even had the opportunity to conduct training for new hires on some of the systems I was familiar with, which I really enjoyed,” she said.

WarnerMedia, however, wasn’t the only company to offer an internship to Jackson, and she said that she was shocked and excited that she was able to line up two internships within one recruitment season. The second firm, Moore Colson CPAs and Advisors, extended an internship offer to Jackson a year out for the 2020 spring semester.

Professor of Information Systems Adriane Randolph is one of Jackson’s professors and said that she isn’t surprised by the student’s success. “Angie gives 100 percent to all of her vigorous commitments while maintaining top marks across her coursework. She loves to learn and goes the extra mile whenever possible, and she will undoubtedly be successful in pursuing her future goals.”

In the fall, Jackson, who earned a $10,000 scholarship from the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, will make the transition to the Master of Accountancy program in the Coles College of Business. Meanwhile, her job prospects are already set for next summer as she’ll return to Moore Colson CPAs and Advisors as a business assurance staff accountant.  

“I really didn’t think there were going to be that many opportunities at KSU, but once I joined the Marching Band, I made so many friendships and connections that will last a lifetime. It opened my world to so much, and I knew that I was where I was supposed to be,” Jackson said. “I feel like I had four years of college in three years with all that I did, and I feel very fortunate to stay at KSU for my master’s degree.”

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Cobb Chamber CEO, President Sharon Mason gets contract extension

Submitted information about Sharon Mason, an East Cobb resident who’s getting a three-year extension as president and CEO of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce:Sharon Mason, Cobb Chamber of Commerce

Today [July 14], the Cobb Chamber Board of Directors announced to extend the terms of the organization’s President and CEO Sharon Mason employment agreement for another three years, through December 2023.

“Since her start as President & CEO in January 2018, Sharon Mason has been leading the Cobb Chamber to achieve its desired vision to be a catalyst for innovative solutions, and create healthy conditions for business. In just three years, Sharon has led the Chamber through the sale of its 35-year-old building and its move to the 10th floor of 1100 Circle 75 Parkway, the expansion of programming, including the launch of the International Council, Workforce Target Industry Councils, and Marquee Monday, a rebrand, and record membership growth,” said John Loud, 2020 Cobb Chamber Chairman and President of LOUD Security Systems. “I have worked closely with Sharon for the past 15 months, and I’ve never worked with someone so committed to their job, to the people they manage, and to the Chamber’s mission to nurturing an environment where businesses can prosper.”

As President and CEO, she leads the Chamber’s efforts to create jobs, strengthen the economy and quality of life for businesses and the community while building Cobb County’s reputation regionally, nationally and beyond. With the Board of Directors moving forward with her contract extension five months before it was set to expire is a vote of confidence regarding Mason’s outstanding job performance.

“Serving this Chamber and our community as its President and CEO is an honor,” says Sharon Mason, President and CEO of the Cobb Chamber. “I am so proud of what we’ve accomplished together with our Board of Directors and chamber team. Now, more than ever, Cobb’s businesses need our organization. We are here to help businesses find their way forward through this time of uncertainty and into the future. I look forward to continue working with our Board of Directors and staff to advance our economy forward.”

Mason has more than 18 years of chamber of commerce experience, including at the Cobb Chamber starting in 2005 and the Birmingham Regional Chamber of Commerce prior. She has held varying leadership positions of increasing importance. Prior to her selection as CEO, Mason served as the Cobb Chamber’s COO in 2013 to 2017.

Mason is a Georgia native and an active member of the community including serving on the Regional Business Coalition Executive Committee, Council for Quality Growth Board of Directors, Wellstar Kennestone Hospital Regional Board, Children’s Healthcare Cobb Community Board, IgniteHQ Board, Cobb County School District Superintendent Advisory Committee, and the Georgia Chamber’s Resiliency and Recovery Task Force. In 2018, she was named by Governor Deal to the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority Board (GRTA) and continues to serve on this board. She also is a Marietta Rotary member and was Foundation Director in 2015-2016, is a past president of Friends for the East Cobb Park non-profit (2012-2013), and served on MUST Ministries Board of Directors from 2014-2019. Mason is a graduate of Chamber Institute for Organizational Management (2011), Leadership Cobb (2012), Regional Leadership Institute (2014), Honorary Commanders (2015), Leadership Atlanta (2018) and is active in these alumni associations.

In 2019 and 2020, Mason was named to Georgia Trend’s Top 100 Most Influential Georgians, Top 100 Most Influential Women in Georgia by Engineering Magazine and Atlanta 500 Most Influential list. In 2020, she was named by James Magazine to the Most Influential Georgians list. She was also named to liveSAFE Resources Academy of Women Leaders in 2015 and Atlanta Magazine’s Women Making a Mark in 2019.

Mason received her bachelor’s from Samford University. She lives in East Cobb with her husband and middle school daughter. They are active at East Cobb Church.

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Wheeler graduate a finalist in national tuxedo design contest

Wheeler student tuxedo design contest

Alexandria Said sends word about a Wheeler High School graduate, Ashton Cordisco, who’s one of five finalists nationwide in a contest for college scholarship money from the Duck Tape Company.

The contest rules require contestants to made a design out of duct tape, and here’s what Ashton, who’ll be attending the Savannah College of Art has—ahem—fashioned.

In order to help him out, you’ve got to click here so he can get votes in the final round. The winner gets $10,000 in college aid from the company, and voting ends July 10.

Ashton Cordisco

 

Ashton Cordisco

 

Ashton Cordico

Ashton Cordisco

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Lassiter graduate honored for thesis at Naval Postgraduate School

Lauren O'Malley, Lassiter graduate

Submitted information and photo:

The Naval Postgraduate School’s (NPS) Operations Research (OR) Department offers M.S. and Ph.D. degrees. Located in Monterey, California, it is one of the oldest, largest, and highest ranking OR departments in the world. It is without peer in terms of the extent to which graduate education is integrated with a commitment to solving real military problems. The NPS Military Operations Research Society selected four graduate students as finalists for the top thesis award. The students presented theses examining a variety of research topics, including machine learning, surface ship maintenance and active shooter scenarios, to a panel of judges for the Military Operations Research Society (MORS) Stephen A. Tisdale Thesis Award, held May 21, 2020. 

Following the detailed presentations and deliberations, the judges awarded Ensign Lauren O’Malley (parents Brian and Shelley O’Malley and graduate of Lassiter High School (2015), Marietta, GA and United States Naval Academy (2019), Annapolis, MD) with the MORS/Tisdale Award and asserted that her research represented the most immediate or near-term value to the defense of the United States and its allies. In her thesis entitled, “Level Loading Surface Ship Maintenance Availabilities,” Ensign O’Malley developed a mixed integer linear programming model to produce an optimal surface ship maintenance schedule to provide private shipyards with a more sustainable and predictable workload, which in turn reduces the risk of maintenance backlogs for the Navy. Ensign O’Malley’s timely research promises to be applied immediately to real-world applications in order to improve current maintenance planning. Her research strives to advance the state-of-the-art surface ship maintenance, extending previous research conducted by NPS graduates Lieutenant Commander Adam Hilliard (2019) and Vice Admiral Richard Brown (1992).

“We’re all very proud of Lauren and the work she has done while at NPS; winning the MORS/Tisdale Award is always a great accomplishment, and she was in very strong company,” stated Dr. Matt Carlyle, Operations Research Department Chair. O’Malley joins a lengthy roster of students earning the esteemed award dating back to the 1970s. “The MORS Tisdale competition is a time where we, as a department, get to celebrate the excellent work that our students do,” said Carlyle. “Anytime anyone asks me about examples of the work we do here, I have a long list of examples that I can show to anyone who’s interested about the fantastic, relevant work that we do in this department.”

O’Malley presented her Award Winning Thesis to Vice Admiral Richard A. Brown, Commander, Naval Surface Forces/Commander, Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet. O’Malley next reports to her ship home ported in San Diego, the Destroyer USS John Finn, where she will receive her designation as a Naval Surface Warfare Officer. From there, Lauren will attend the Navy’s Nuclear Power School in Charleston, SC, studying Nuclear Engineering which will ultimately lead her to being responsible for the operations of the nuclear propulsion system on an U.S. Navy Aircraft Carrier.

The MORS/Tisdale Award is named in honor of Lieutenant Commander Stephen A. Tisdale, who graduated from the Naval Post Graduate school in 1989 with two master’s degrees: an M.S. in Operations Research and an M.S. in Space Systems Operations. His outstanding and influential thesis, “Assessing Optimal Utilization of Potential Anti-Satellite Architectures,” won the MORS prize. The MORS prize was renamed in honor of this outstanding officer-scholar after his tragic death in the collision of two P-3 Orions conducting a submarine tracking exercise at low altitude off the California coast on 21 March 1991. 

 

 

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Wheeler reunion for classes of 1967-72 set for late April

Thanks to Nancy Collier for sending along this invitation to anyone who graduated from Wheeler High School between 1967 and 1972.

The picnic is to honor the 50th anniversary of the Class of 1970, but the invitation has been expanded to a few classes before and after.

 

Wheeler class reunion

Nancy is with the Marietta-based Peachtree School of the Arts and a private flute and bassoon teacher who’s community recognitions include the Leadership Cobb Class of 2006 and Arts Leaders of Metro Atlanta Class of 2010.

 

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East Cobb resident earns Cobb Chamber’s public service award

Susan Hampton, Cobb Chamber public service award
Susan Hampton with outgoing Cobb Chamber of Commerce president Mitch Rhoden. (Cobb C of C photo)

At its annual gala dinner Saturday, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce presented East Cobb resident Susan Hampton with its Mack Henderson Public Service Award, given to “someone who is outstanding in their commitment and dedication to enhancing the quality of life for the citizens of Cobb County.”

Hampton has organized the East Cobb Business Association’s appreciation events for Cobb Police Precinct 4 officers and Cobb Fire personnel, and is part of the newly formed Cobb County Public Safety Foundation.

Over the last year, she has been outspoken in favor of better pay and benefits for Cobb public safety workers.

In being presented the award Saturday, the Chamber called Hampton a “tireless advocate for Cobb’s public safety personnel. Whether it’s acting as a vocal supporter for higher wages or organizing an appreciation event for local law enforcement, this award winner devotes her volunteer efforts to the community she serves.”

Hampton also is active with the Cobb County Coalition of Business Associations, “working with the coalition’s founders and other committed volunteers continuing the legacy of Barbara Hickey, lending her hand whenever it is needed,” according to the Chamber’s presentation.

The Cobb Chamber also honored former U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson at the gala dinner. The Republican from East Cobb was presented with the Chamber’s Senator Johnny H. Isakson Leadership Award, which has been renamed in his honor.

The Chamber has dedicated the 10th floor of its new offices at 1100 Circle 75 Parkway in Isakson’s name.

Sen. Johnny Isakson, Cobb chamber
Retired U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson speaks at the Cobb Chamber gala dinner Saturday. (Cobb C of C photo)

 

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Growing up in Mt. Bethel

Old Mt. Bethel Community Center
The original Mt. Bethel Community Center on Johnson Ferry Road also housed a school and was the first Cobb Police precinct location in East Cobb. (Special photo)

It’s hard to imagine the East Cobb we live in now being mostly farmland not that long ago. But going back in history turned out to a delightful departure from current news cycle for many of our readers after we published a story this summer about a family that remembered the community when it was called Mt. Bethel.

Read the story

As the siblings of a prominent Mt. Bethel family told us, the changes have been rather recent: They were among the first graduates of Walton High School in the late 1970s, attending classes with suburban peers while they grew up on a farm on Lower Roswell Road at Woodlawn Drive.

Some of their cows occasionally wandered into a new planned community with a golf course that changed the area for good.

“When Indian Hills opened, that was a huge caveat to a changing community,” said Cherie Chandler, the fifth of the six Poss children. “That’s when it went from being Mt. Bethel to East Cobb.”

Her sister Gail Poss Towe saw a story we published in May about the demolition of a home near theirs belonging to Wilce Frasier, and was eager to share stories about a very different time.

We sat down with the three youngest children of Arthur and Evelyn Poss, who threw themselves into family and community life with eagerness and impact.

Poss children, East Cobb Mt. Bethel
From left, Gail Poss Towe, Mark Poss and Cherie Poss Chandler, the youngest children of Arthur and Evelyn Poss. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

The response from readers to this story was heartwarming: More local history, please! While we haven’t been able to do that as much as we had hoped, we’ve got some ideas along those lines heading into 2020.

 

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County salutes East Cobb World War II veteran for 99th birthday

Harry Kone, East Cobb World War II veteran
Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell presents Harry Kone with a proclamation at his 99th birthday party.

Information and photos via Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell:

The Squire “Skip” Wells Marine Corp League Detachment #647 hosted a birthday celebration for 99-year-old “Life Member” Harry Kone on Wednesday [Aug. 14] at Woodstock’s Semper Fi Bar & Grill. The event was well attended by fellow detachment members, other veterans and members of the Skip Wells Foundation.

Harry enjoyed his lunch of “S>O>S” (sausage gravy on toast) and a beer. After lunch Harry cut his birthday cake using a USMC NCO Sword. He cut it straight like the sharpshooter he is. Immediately after the cake cutting, I presented a framed Cobb County Commission proclamation declaring August 16, 2019 is to be officially known as “Harry Kone Day” in Cobb County.Harry Kone, East Cobb World War II veteran

Before cake was passed around, detachment Jr. Vice Commandant Jason Rusk, showed a framed display of ribbons and awards, including the Navy Cross, which were worn by Medal of Honor Recipient Gen. Raymond G. Davis. The display was presented to Ralph Roeger, owner of Semper Fi Bar & Grill, and will be hung at the restaurant, which was recently recognized by the Atlanta Business Chronicle as the Veteran Owned Small Business of the Year.

One grand highlight of the day was that Harry enlisted in the Marines after the attack on Pearl Harbor, General Davis was already a Marine Officer they both were in battle on Guadalcanal and both received praise. It’s also ironic that Gen. Davis was a member of Detachment 647, when it was known as Greater Atlanta, as Harry is now after a name change to honor “Skip” Wells.

Harry Joseph Kone was born on Aug. 16, 1920, in Baltimore to his loving and devoted parents Harry and Marie Kone. He grew up in Baltimore and graduated from Mt. Saint Joseph High School in 1938. Mr. Kone worked as a welder while attending the University of Wisconsin on a scholarship to help develop children’s programming for the early days of television.

Because of Pearl Harbor, he decided to join the U.S. Marine Corps in 1942 and deployed to the Pacific Theater as a machine gunner and expert rifleman. He was injured several times during his service in the South Pacific campaigns. He was then sent to Quantico for Officer Candidate School, but his injuries were too severe. He was honorably discharged in 1945.

Back in America, Mr. Kone married the love of his life, Marjorie, and they built a life together in Chicago. That same year, he was diagnosed with tuberculosis and spent two years in a VA hospital. After many prayers, he recovered and attended Northwestern University for his undergraduate and graduate degrees. He spent his life as a dedicated teacher in the Chicago Public School System, first in elementary, then high school and finally at the college level teaching public speaking and English as a second language.

Mr. Kone and Marjorie enjoyed a beautiful 65-year love story and had three children, Sue, Barbara and Stuart. After 50 years in Chicago, he and Marjorie moved to the South to spend more time with their family. In 2012, he joined Marine Corps League Detachment 647 in Marietta and became a life member of the Marine Corps League in 2013. Kone currently lives in east Cobb with his daughter.

 

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Before it was East Cobb, the Mt. Bethel community was home for Poss family

Mt. Bethel community East Cobb, Poss family
From left, Gail Poss Towe, Mark Poss and Cherie Poss Chandler, the youngest children of Arthur and Evelyn Poss. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

As a girl in the early 1960s, Gail Poss Towe would sit in front of her family home and count the number of cars passing by on what was called South Roswell Road, or Route 3.

“There was nothing going on,” she recalls of a much slower pace of life.

During those days, the Posses lived in a community that was called Mt. Bethel, named after the Methodist church then located on Johnson Ferry Road, and a school, community center and baseball field across the road.

Gail’s younger sister, Cherie Poss Chandler, remembers cows from the family farm wandering down what had become known as Lower Roswell Road, and into a new development of homes and a golf course called Indian Hills.

By then, the early 1970s, the name “East Cobb” was rolling off the tongues of newcomers moving into a rapidly suburbanizing part of metro Atlanta.

The Posses still called their surroundings Mt. Bethel, but they could see what was coming. While they welcomed newer schools and more conveniences, they also knew that their community would never be the same.

“When Indian Hills opened, that was a huge caveat to a changing community,” said Chandler, the fifth of the Poss children.

“That’s when it went from being Mt. Bethel to East Cobb.”

Mt. Bethel community East Cobb, Poss family
The Poss home at 4608 Lower Roswell Road, where the Mt. Bethel Community Center stands today at Woodlawn Drive. (Poss family photo)

Memories of another time

Gail and Cherie and their brother Mark, the youngest of six children of Arthur and Evelyn Poss, were childhood witnesses to a stunning transformation of a community that went from rural to suburban within the space of a generation.

Although the Posses never moved, their children went to three different high schools. The oldest, Betty Poss Smith, Linda Poss Webster and Marion Arthur Poss Jr. earned diplomas from Sprayberry, when it was still located on the current campus of The Walker School on Cobb Parkway at Allgood Road.

Gail graduated from Wheeler, and Cherie and Mark from Walton.

Unlike the suburban kids who were becoming their schoolmates, they fed chickens and did other farm chores before school.

Believe it not, they played kickball in Johnson Ferry Road, and walked down the corner of Johnson Ferry and Lower Roswell to the Johnny Perkins and Fred Sauls stores, both country groceries, to spend their allowance money on gum and candy.

Betty was a lifeguard at the private pool at the Parkaire airfield. Cherie recalls a fire station on the current site of the Chick-fil-A on Johnson Ferry. What’s now Merchants Walk Shopping Center was the Porter farm, run by an influential family.

In those days, the intersection of Johnson Ferry and what was called Upper Roswell Road was dubbed Five Points.

“I can’t remember what the fifth road was called,” Towe said.

When the Posses were kids, there wasn’t a nearby police station. In 1980, the old Mt. Bethel Community Center—originally built as Mt. Bethel Elementary School—became the first home for Cobb Police Precinct 4, opened by the county at Arthur Poss’ urging.

The first captain there, Bob Hightower, was good friends with Arthur Poss and later would become Cobb’s first public safety director. The center was the hub of local life, the spot for turkey shoots in the fall, cake walks and Friday community suppers.

Further down Woodlawn Drive was another farm owned by a prosperous businessman, Atlanta car dealer Walter Boomershine, who retired there to raise cows and Tennessee walking horses.

Mt. Bethel community East Cobb, Poss family
An aerial photo of the Poss farmstead on 10 acres at Lower Roswell Road and Woodlawn Drive. (Poss family photo)

The Posses lived on 10 acres at what is now the southwest intersection of Lower Roswell and Woodlawn Drive. Behind the home, where the current Mt. Bethel Community Center stands, were chicken coops. Black Angus and white Hereford cows roamed in the back, as did quail and bird dogs.

Off to the side was an area called “the onion bed” where vegetables and fruits were grown, and included a grapevine lush with muscadines. Arthur Poss also kept honeybees.

“He came from a long line of farmers,” Chandler says of her father. “He farmed because he loved the land, and he wanted us to learn to grow things.”

Their closest neighbor was Wilce Frasier, who lived on the opposite corner Lower Roswell and Woodlawn in a family home dating back to the late 1890s, where he cultivated a small garden.

“He was just so sweet,” Chandler said.

“His house was fabulous,” added Towe. “There were antiques and flowers everywhere.”

Coming back home to Mt. Bethel

Marion Arthur Poss Sr. was raised on another farm in Mt. Bethel. His grandparents, David and Nancy Poss, settled on some land on what is now known as Johnson Ferry Road, near Post Oak Tritt Road, after the Civil War.

His parents also had land on Johnson Ferry, on the current site of the River Hill subdivision, then moved to the present location of the Johnson Ferry Animal Hospital below Lower Roswell.

That’s where Arthur grew up before living in Brookhaven as a young man. When he returned to Mt. Bethel in the early 1940s, he brought with him his bride Evelyn Barfield Poss, a city girl from Atlanta. In 1947, they moved to a house he built at 4608 South Roswell/Route 3—then a dirt road—and raised their family.

At the time, they used coal to heat the house—there was no natural gas—and Propane tanks to keep the chicken houses warm. Their water supply came from a well.

Mt. Bethel community East Cobb, Poss family
Newlyweds Arthur and Evelyn Poss in the early 1940s. (Poss family photo)

Arthur made his living as a master plumber, traveling around Atlanta on jobs that included Crawford Long Hospital, as well as businesses and other institutions.

In his soul, however, he was a farmer, and in his spare time he ran a 50-acre spread on South Roswell. In the 1950s, Cobb County government wanted most of his land to build a wastewater treatment plant, and condemned 40 acres.

That’s where the James E. Quarles Water Treatment Plant, completed in 1952 as the first facility of the Cobb County-Marietta Water Authority, sits today.

In the 1980s, the land fronting the plant on Lower Roswell became the site for the East Cobb Government Service Center, including the current headquarters for Precinct 4 and Cobb Fire Station 21.

As their children were growing up, Arthur and Evelyn were heavily involved in community life. He served as president of the Mt. Bethel Community Center for 16 years and after retiring as a plumber was a court bailiff.

Another of Arthur’s good friends was former Cobb Sheriff Bill Hutson, and they were regular hunting companions.

Evelyn served on PTA boards at Mt. Bethel Elementary and East Side Elementary and was a devoted member and president of the Sope Creek Garden Club, winning ribbons at the Cobb County Fair for her hydrangeas and other flowers she tended at home.

“She was sweetest lady ever,” Chandler said of her mother.

Mt. Bethel community East Cobb, Poss family
A building at Lower Roswell and Johnson Ferry Road that housed the original Mt. Bethel Elementary School, Mt. Bethel Community Center and Cobb Police Precinct 4 stood until 2000. (Poss family photo)

Subdivided and suburbanized

By the time the Poss children were grown, most markers of the old Mt. Bethel community had been swept away.

The community center was torn down in 2000, when Johnson Ferry was widened to six lanes, and the church was relocated years before across from the East Cobb government center.

While the church cemetery still lines Johnson Ferry near the new Northside medical complex, Perkins and Sauls were replaced by the likes of CVS, Zaxby’s and Tijuana Joe’s. The Parkaire airport gave way to what is now Parkaire Landing Shopping and the Marietta Ice Center.

The U.S. Postal Service wanted to buy the Poss land, prizing the location at the Lower Roswell-Woodlawn intersection.

“Dad turned it down,” Towe said. “He just wouldn’t sell. That’s why the post office (located just down Lower Roswell next to Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church) is where it is now.”

Arthur Poss died in 1990; Evelyn Poss stayed in the home until her death in 1999. The house and the property were sold in 2001.

The current Mt. Bethel Community Center is the home to Aloha to Aging, a non-profit senior services agency, and counseling services provided by Mt. Bethel UMC.

Chandler said that some years before, her father wanted to build a subdivision on the back of the land and have streets named after each of his children, “but Cobb County had a different idea.”

Today, what was the Poss farmstead is now the Whitehall subdivision (below).

Mt. Bethel community East Cobb, Poss family, Whitehall subdivision

The Poss children scattered into adulthood, but not too far away. Betty and Linda, both retired, are still in East Cobb. Cherie lives in Roswell and is a substitute teacher at Roswell High School. Gail and Mark reside in Woodstock. Their brother Marion, who settled in Douglasville, died in 2014 at the age of 68.

Cherie says when she comes back through East Cobb with her son, she’ll find herself pointing to a development and say “that was a pasture,” and offering other such recollections.

The Poss siblings say these things without passing judgment, understanding the nature of the changes they experienced. They did sound bittersweet upon learning of the demolition of the Frasier home earlier this year (previous East Cobb News story here), realizing that truly was the last standing memory of the world they had known as Mt. Bethel.

They were also thinking about what their father thought of what had come to be known as East Cobb, and how it’s growing still.

“For him to see the land turned into buildings, that was just sad to him,” Chandler said.

“He loved the land, and he just loved the Mt. Bethel community.”

Mt. Bethel community East Cobb, Poss family
A 2005 photo of the Poss siblings, from left: Mark Poss, Cherie Poss Chandler, Gail Poss Towe, Linda Poss Webster, the late Marion Arthur Poss Jr. and Betty Poss Smith. (Poss family photo)

 

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East Cobb graduate student completes Arabic Flagship program

Richard Solomon, East Cobb graduate student

Submitted information and photo:

Richard Solomon, an East Cobb resident who graduated as a Wells Scholar from Indiana University in 2018 with a B.S. and B.A. in international studies, political science and philosophy, completed the Arabic Flagship program in Meknes, Morocco this past May as a 2019 Boren Fellow.

Richard has studied Arabic at Bethlehem University and Hebrew University, and with the National Security Language Initiative for Youth in Morocco.

A recent CASA (Center for Arabic Studies Abroad) Fellowship recipient, Richard moved last month to Cairo, Egypt where he will continue to receive advanced-level training in Arabic language and culture for a year at the American University in Cairo.

Richard’s research interests include bargaining theory, institutional analysis, and literature.

After a year in Cairo, Richard plans to pursue a PhD in political science or Middle Eastern studies.

 

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To share news tips and photos with East Cobb News at anytime, as well as to inquire about news events, here’s how to get in touch:

  • Phone/text: 404-219-4278;
  • E-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com; please give a general description of your e-mail in the subject field.

If you’re leaving a news tip (especially about a crime, fire, accident, emergency or severe weather event) please provide contact information so we can confirm and follow up. Messages sent via phone, text and e-mail are preferred; please limit social media messages to breaking news only.

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Recent East Cobb graduate gets State Department scholarship to Estonia

Caroline Solomon, recent East Cobb graduate

Caroline Solomon, an East Cobb resident who recently graduated from high school, will be having a busy summer before she begins classes at the University of Georgia this fall.

She let us know that she’s the recipient of a National Security Language Initiative for Youth scholarship through the U.S. State Department, and will be studying Russian in Estonia.

Caroline says she’s been home-schooled for her entire K-12 education, and at UGA she plans to double major in international affairs and art with a focus in textiles and design.

She also plans to minor in Russian and participate in UGA’s Russian Flagship Program after studying Russian during her high school years.

Here’s more about the summer program she’s participating in from the American Councils for International Education:

Caroline, competitively selected out of over 3,300 applications from across the United States, is one of approximately 660 students who will study Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Indonesian, Korean, Persian, Russian, or Turkish overseas this coming year. While in Estonia, Caroline will receive formal language instruction, live with a host family, and experience the local culture as part of an immersion environment.

NSLI-Y is part of a multi-agency U.S. Government initiative launched in 2006 to improve Americans’ ability to communicate in select critical languages, to advance international dialogue, and increase American economic global competitiveness.

Many NSLI-Y alumni go on to pursue education and careers vital to U.S. national security and credit the program experience with helping them improve their academic, leadership, and cross-cultural communication skills.

NSLI-Y is administered by American Councils for International Education in cooperation with AFS-USA, American Cultural Exchange Service, AMIDEAST, iEARN-USA, the Russian American Foundation, Stony Brook University, the University of Delaware, and the University of Wisconsin.

Applications for 2020-21 NSLI-Y programs are expected to be available at www.nsliforyouth.org in the late summer. The U.S. Department of State conducts study abroad programs for over 1,000 American high school students and approximately 3,000 foreign high school students each year. Visit https://exchanges.state.gov/highschool for details.

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To share news tips and photos with East Cobb News at anytime, as well as to inquire about news events, here’s how to get in touch:

  • Phone/text: 404-219-4278;
  • E-mail: editor@eastcobbnews.com; please give a general description of your e-mail in the subject field.

If you’re leaving a news tip (especially about a crime, fire, accident, emergency or severe weather event) please provide contact information so we can confirm and follow up. Messages sent via phone, text and e-mail are preferred; please limit social media messages to breaking news only.

To submit calendar items, e-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com; to send an announcement, e-mail: announcements@eastcobbnews.com.

Here’s how we can be reached via social media:

East Cobb News understands the need for confidentiality in some cases but we cannot publish information from totally anonymous sources.

 

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East Cobb quilter’s winning Prince design part of Mable House exhibit

East Cobb quilter, Devon Pfeiff

The image you see above is actually a photo of a quilt of the late pop star Prince that was designed by Devon Pfeif, a member of the East Cobb Quilters’ Guild.

She was recently named the winner of a competition, the Prince Cherrywood Challenge, that will culminate with an exhibit sponsored by the East Cobb Quilters’ Guild next month at the Mable House.

The challenge is sponsored by the Cherrywood Hand Dyed Fabrics and requires artists to create a unique quilt, with a specific theme, measuring 20 by 20 inches, utilizing only the few fabrics selected by the company.

Some background on Devon before explaining her prize-winning entry:East Cobb quilter, Devon Pfeiff

She grew up in New Jersey, surrounding by artistry, not just via nearby New York City, but also having an artistic grandfather. Her background in graphic arts included regular work with fabric as a medium, in designing, batiking, quilting, or sewing.

After moving to the Marietta area, she got a recommendation to join East Cobb Quilters’ Guild from a friend and found an active community that shared her love of fabrics.

Here’s what happened after Devon heard about the challenge a couple of years ago at an art show, according to information submitted by the guild:

On her 2016 & 2017 entries, she received special recognitions. On this 2018 Challenge, Devon triumphed over the competition, placing first out of 380 entries, with her beautiful design detailing Prince’s face and signature “Love Symbol” dangling from his necklace.

Her design continued to evolve throughout its creation. “It’s a process. I never know what the final piece is going to look like,” she said. With the small quilt size and limited fabrics to incorporate into the design, the contests are very challenging. But, for Devon the challenge is what intrigues her.

Devon said, “to me, the process of figuring it out, the puzzling and solving, is the most exciting part.”

Devon’s prize-winning art quilt, “New Beginnings,” is part of the 75-piece traveling Cherrywood Tribute Tour. Here’s more about that, from the Cobb Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs:

The Prince Cherrywood Challenge Tribute Tour exhibit featuring 75 quilts is presented by East Cobb Quilters’ Guild in collaboration with Cobb County Parks and will be held at the Mable House Arts Center, Friday, July 5 through Thursday, July 11.

The most recent competition in 2018 challenged participants to create a design with the theme of Prince, calling for the use of rich purple hues to embody the sensational artist and his work.

The Prince challenge received 380 entries, and 75 of the most noteworthy designs will be featured at the exhibit at Mable House Arts Center, including two from additional East Cobb Quilters’ Guild members, Ben Hollingsworth and Gail Oliver.

On Friday, July 5, 2019 experience a night entirely dedicated to Prince with the opening reception at the Mable House Arts Center taking place from 5 p.m.-8 p.m., featuring the 75 fabric art designs from finalists of the international competition, each honoring the musical legend.

The event at the Mable House Amphitheater beginning at 7 p.m., also includes a Prince Tribute, with a free live concert headlined by Hero The Band, followed by a screening of “Purple Rain” at 8:30 p.m.

The Prince Cherrywood Challenge Tribute Tour exhibit admission is free and will be held at the Mable House Arts Center, 5239 Floyd Road, Mableton.

For more information visit the Mable House events listings and the Cherrywood Fabrics Prince Challenge page.

 

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Original East Cobb Home Depot employee retires after 22 years

Chuck Heegn, East Cobb Home Depot

Thanks to Candice Farley, the specialty manager at the East Home Depot store at Providence Square, for the information and photos about Chuck Heegn.

He’s an associate who was part of the store’s opening 22 years ago (it’s officially called the Merchant’s Walk store these days), and on Thursday he retired with a fond farewell from his co-workers.

Here’s more she shared about him, and the sendoff:

“Chuck Heegn is a proud U.S. Veteran, cancer survivor and recently celebrated his 22nd anniversary with the Merchant’s Walk Home Depot. He said he enjoyed seeing the children of the community come in for the kids workshop and over the years, have them bring in their children to attend the monthly workshop. Our store will miss him dearly and we wish him the best!”

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Know of someone who’s observing a milestone, or who’s done something positive in the community? Share your stories with the community, including photos if you have them. E-mail us at: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

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East Cobb resident named Cumberland CID executive director

Kim Menefee, Cumberland CID executive director

It’s been an unstable couple of years at the top of the Cumberland Community Improvement District (CID), the first such entity in Georgia whose business owners tax themselves for infrastructure and other improvements to spur economic development.

In early 2018, executive director Malika Rivers resigned after nearly 22 years with the organization. Her successor, former Cumberland CID board chairman Tad Leithead, stepped down earlier this year, after only a few months on the job, when he was arrested for DUI in Forsyth County.

Last month the CID board named an East Cobb resident, Kim Menefee, a longtime executive with WellStar Health System, as its lone finalist, and today her hiring was made official.

Submitted information and photo:

The board of directors of the Cumberland Community Improvement District (CID) announced today that it voted unanimously to approve Kim Menefee as the organization’s new executive director.

Menefee brings impressive career credentials to the CID, having served Cobb-based WellStar Health System in senior marketing, communications and public/government affairs positions for more than 20 years. She led the team that created the WellStar brand in addition to developing the government relations role building strong relationships at the local, state and federal levels.

Most recently, Menefee served as WellStar’s senior vice president of strategic community development. In that position, she was responsible for developing the strategic direction and alignment of community engagement and sponsorship with philanthropy efforts, all of which were designed to secure and expand support for WellStar.

“We are elated that Kim has accepted our offer to lead the Cumberland CID,” said Board Chairman John Shern. “We had tremendous interest in this role by very highly qualified and talented individuals. We were impressed with Kim’s extensive professional experience and connections to the Cobb and greater Atlanta business communities.

“We’re looking forward to a new chapter in the CID’s success story and know that Kim is the right person to take us to the next level,” Shern added.

A longtime and current board member of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, Menefee served as chair in 2015. She served as co-chair of Cobb’s Competitive Edge (now Select Cobb) that launched in 2013. She has held leadership positions on numerous not-for-profit boards in addition to serving on the Georgia Chamber of Commerce Board of Governors, the Metro Atlanta Chamber Board of Advisors, and Kennesaw State University Community Advisory Board, the latter of which she served as a spring commencement speaker in 2016.

“Businesses are choosing the Cumberland area more than ever before,” Menefee stated. “Through the Cumberland CID’s leadership and investment over the last 31 years, the area has become a booming economic engine for Cobb County now representing more than five percent of Georgia’s total economy.

“I’m looking forward to working with the board, investors and stakeholders to build upon the successes and further cement Cumberland at the forefront of innovation and development. Together, we will continue to create a more dynamic urban center and vibrant regional gateway.”

Menefee holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism from the University of Georgia’s Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.

The 6.5-square-mile Cumberland CID includes part of the Powers Ferry Road corridor, below Terrell Mill Road, as well as the area around what’s now SunTrust Park, the Galleria, Cobb Energy Centre, Cumberland Mall and portions of Vinings.

 

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Lassiter graduate named one of Top 25 Asian-Americans in Georgia

Allen Chen, Top 25 Asian-Americans in Georgia

Submitted information and photo:

Allen Chen, senior vice president at Bank of America, has been named as one of the 25 most influential Asian Americans in Georgia for 2019 during National Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.

This award was given to Chen for his efforts in both his professional and his personal life, advocating for the Asian community in Atlanta.

At Bank of America, Chen manages a chapter of an Asian-focused employee leadership network and was part of the network’s founding team that is celebrating its 20th Anniversary. This Asian leadership network group is one of the oldest employee network groups at the bank, started in 1999. Today, there are 20 chapters across the country with close to 10,000 members.

Outside of work, Chen serves as president and Chairman of the National Association of Asian American Professional (NAAAP) and has won the Presidential Volunteer Service Award for the past three years, averaging over 1,000 hours per year – exhibiting his passion for philanthropy and community service.

As a native of Georgia, Chen grew up a second-generation immigrant and earned his bachelor’s degree from Kennesaw State University. He currently resides and works in Kennesaw, lending his 16 years of experience in the financial services industry, working on the credit card product team where he manages one of the largest partnerships at Bank of America.

 

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Simpson MS student named ‘Ultimate Kid Ninja Champion’

Vance Walker, Ultimate Kid Ninja Champion

Last fall we noted that several East Cobb kids were involved in the TV series “American Ninja Warrior Junior” on the Universal Kids outlet.

The season wrapped up on April 27, and one of those kids training out of Ninja Quest on Canton Road, has been named an ultimate kid ninja champion. Congrats to Vance Walker, who attends Simpson Middle School. Submitted information and video explain and show what they all had to do during the competition:

Vance was the winner of the 13-14 age bracket. The competition started with over 200 Junior Ninjas from across the U.S. facing off on head to head courses in three age brackets: 9 & 10, 11 & 12, and 13 & 14-year-old girls and boys. There were three final winners (one per age bracket). “American Ninja Warrior Junior” courses feature iconic Ninja Warrior obstacles, including Sonic Swing, Tic Toc, Spin Cycle, and the Warped Wall. 

 

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East Cobb youth Ninja Warriors set to compete in cable TV series

East Cobb youth Ninja Warriors

Thanks to Kent Walker for the information about and photos of five East Cobb youth Ninja Warriors, including one of his own, who will be appearing next weekend on the first episode of the “American Ninja Warriors Junior” series on the Universal Kids cable outlet.

Kent says the five kids work out at Ninja Quest on Canton Road, and were among 6,000 applicants to make the initial cut.

Three are in the 13-14 age group, and two others in the 11-12 age group. They are Vance Walker and Luke Milman, who both attend Simpson Middle School. Ethan Bartnicki goes to Walton High School, and Brooks Bieber and Tate Allen are home-schooled.

Kent tells us that “A couple of them went really far in the competition. I can’t tell the exact outcome. There will be 20 episodes as the competition narrows down to one winner in each of 3 age groups.”

In other words, you’ve got to stay tuned. That debut episode is Saturday at 7 p.m.

Here’s more about the series from Universal Kids:East Cobb Youth Ninja Warriors 2

Gold Medal Winning Olympic Gymnast Laurie Hernandez will co-host American Ninja Warrior Junior with Matt Iseman and Akbar Gbajabiamila on Universal Kids, NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment’s network for kids 2-12. This next generation of American Ninja Warrior marks the first time some of the show’s biggest fans can become part of this five-time Emmy nominated worldwide phenomenon. 

American Ninja Warrior Junior celebrates real kids taking on the iconic course with dedication and skill. Nearly 200 boy and girl Junior Ninjas from across the U.S. will face off on the same Head to Head courses in three age brackets: 9 & 10, 11 & 12, and 13 & 14 year olds. The courses will feature iconic Ninja Warrior obstacles, including Sonic Swing, Tic Toc, Spin Cycle, and the Warped Wall. Each age bracket will be mentored by All Star Ninja Mentors – Kevin Bull, Drew Drechsel, Natalie Duran, Meagan Martin, Najee Richardson, and Barclay Stockett. Three final winners (one per age bracket) will be crowned the first ever American Ninja Warrior Junior Champions.

“At Universal Kids, we see kids as they see themselves and want to share their stories,” said Deirdre Brennan, General Manager Universal Kids. “American Ninja Warrior Junior celebrates a kid-centric movement that everyone can be a part of and enjoy together. It will encourage and inspire all kids to push their limits and not shy away from challenges.”

“Over the last number of years, we have received an outpouring of letters and videos asking when is there going to be a Ninja show for kids? Well, the time is now! People are going to be amazed at how talented and dedicated these young ninjas are,” said Arthur Smith, CEO of A. Smith & Co. Productions and Executive Producer of the ‘American Ninja Warrior’ franchise. “They’re remarkable, and to know that they’ve been inspired by our show is immensely gratifying.”

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Wheeler F1 racing team prepares for its first international competition

Wheeler F1 racing team
From L-R, Wheeler F1 racing team members Shivam Patel, Michael Jin and Arul Gupta. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

Members of the Wheeler F1 racing team had barely gotten off the plane after winning a national competition in June when they knew what they had to do next.

“We were on cloud nine for about three hours,” said Arul Gupta, the executive manager and marketing director of the AeroFlow Racing team, which includes five students who attend the Wheeler STEM Magnet School.

They’re spending what’s left of their summer redesigning their foam and light plastic miniature vehicle for the F1 in Schools world competition in Singapore in September.

They know they have to step up their game in marketing, project management, promotions, community outreach and fundraising—the other components of the entrepreneurially-constructed F1 in Schools concept—in facing the global elites of the circuit for the first time.

There’s little time to waste.

“We’re doing prototypes now” for the cars they want to take to Singapore, said Michael Jin, the manufacturing engineer for Aeroflow Racing.

At the F1 in Schools National Finals in Austin, Texas, their car posted a time of 1.3 seconds along a track of 24 meters, or 78 feet (as they demonstrated in April at the Wheeler STEAM Symposium), the best time of all the cars there.

In Singapore, Gupta said, “1.3 isn’t going to cut it.” He figures Aeroflow needs to cut it down to 1.1 seconds to have a shot against the elite teams, especially those coming from Australia and Britain, the hotbeds for F1 in Schools.

The AeroFlow team scored around 920 points out of a possible 1000 in all phases of the national competition, which included teams with ages ranging from 9 to 19.

While team members are proud of that, they know that most of the 40 teams heading to Asia are more experienced than AeroFlow, which was formed in the fall of 2016. The global competition, Gupta said, is also “much more rigorous” in judging.

“They don’t grade just how fast your car goes,” he said. “They judge design, marketing, social media strategy, all of that.”

The AeroFlow team even had to design and update its own website as part of the competition.

Wheeler F1 racing
The victorious Wheeler F1 racing team car at the U.S. Nationals. (AeroFlow Racing photo)

Last year, the Wheeler students finished fifth in their maiden national competition. “We wanted to the best we could,” said Gupta, who lives in the Pope High School district and who like his fellow AeroFlow team members commutes to classes at Wheeler. “It gave us a better idea what we had to improve upon.”

The speed of the car had to get better, and they decided making it as light as possible was the key.

Getting that weight to 50 grams, the minimum allowed in F1 in Schools, is an exacting and time-consuming task.

That task fell largely to Jin, who lives in the Walton High School district. “When you’re making a car, getting the design right is so important,” he said. “Adding a couple of coats of paint can make a big difference.”

The construction includes forming the car body out of a foam block, then adding plastic components that include the wheels and other elements that enhance speed.

As they were evolving their model over the last school year, the AeroFlow team members consulted with Georgia Tech aerospace engineering professors who advised them on lift and downforce.

“The car’s acting almost like a rocket,” Gupta said.

“The real difficulty is getting the right finishing on it,” Jin said, with the ideal being “a perfectly smooth surface.”

Added Gupta: “It should be smooth as glass,” with a glossy look.

The AeroFlow car turned in a time of 1.13 seconds at the Wheeler STEAM Symposium in April. (East Cobb News file photo)

The intricate attention to detail in F1 in Schools is paramount, but the rising Wheeler seniors on the AeroFlow team say they embrace the challenge that’s largely outside the classroom.

While they submit college applications (among the schools are MIT, Carnegie Mellon, Cal Tech, Stanford, Georgia Tech and Emory), they enjoy learning the well-rounded skills they have to develop.

“You get to be extremely hands-on,” said Gupta, who in his role works with Novelis, an aluminum products manufacturer that is AeroFlow’s main corporate sponsor.

Even the AeroFlow name came after a lot of thought among team members. “How can we be known for something that’s related to what we’re doing,” he said. “That sounds about right.”

Jin said he especially likes the chance to “simulate the real world” and “this shows what drives innovation.

“We feel like we’re in a pretty good place. We know what our competition is and what we are doing well.”

The other immediate challenge the AeroFlow team has is raising money to make the trip to Singapore.

They estimated that all their costs, from entry fees to air fare, food and lodging, will cost around $37,000.

Thus far, they’ve raised around $24,000, with less than two months before their trip.

The AeroFlow team has created a GoFundMe page to accept donations from anyone wishing to help out.

The Wheeler-based AeroFlow team members after winning the U.S. Nationals in Austin, Texas, in June. (AeroFlow Racing photo)

 

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Dodgen Middle School student graduates from U.S. Space Camp

Amanda Truong, Dodgen Middle School student

Thanks to East Cobb resident Phillip Truong for passing along the photo of his daughter, Amanda, who recently attended Space Camp at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Ala. He also shared this information below provided by the center:

The weeklong educational program promotes science, technology, engineering and math (STEM), while training students and with hands-on activities and missions based on teamwork, leadership and problem solving.
 
This program, which is specifically designed for trainees who have a particular interest in space exploration. Truong spent the week training with a team that flew a simulated space mission to the International Space Station (ISS). Once aboard the ISS, the crew participated in experiments and successfully completed an extra-vehicular activity (EVA), or spacewalk. Truong and crew returned to earth in time to graduate with honors.
 
Space Camp operates year-round in Huntsville, Alabama, and uses astronaut training techniques to engage trainees in real-world applications of STEM subjects. Students sleep in quarters designed to resemble the ISS and train in simulators like those used by NASA.
 
More than 750,000 trainees have graduated from Space Camp since its inception in Huntsville, Alabama in 1982, including European Space Agency astronaut, Samantha Cristoforetti and NASA astronauts Dottie Metcalf-Lindenburger, Dr. Kate Rubins and Dr. Serena Auñón, who recently launched to the International Space Station. Children and teachers from all 50 states and 69 international locations have attended a Space Camp® program.

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